Part 7 (1/2)
The Reverend Mother is over seventy; and one sister lived to be nigh upon ninety. Oh, how did she bear it? How did she bear it?”
The young head sank down upon the hard pillow; a moaning came from the lips that should have been smiling and happy with the dawn of tender womanhood. But on that fair young face there was a look as of fixed despair.
Clasped in her hand was a letter, which seemed the immediate cause of her grief, as in a sense it was; for it was the stern reply sent to her by her parents in response to her pa.s.sionate appeal to be taken away from the convent, and permitted to live the life of happy girlhood in her father's house, where, as she strove to point out, her place had been set.
”It is some subtle device of the enemy that is tempting thee away from the higher life,” her father had written; ”thy choice was made. It would be sacrilege that would imperil thy soul's salvation to seek to retrace thy steps.”
”I did not choose! I did not choose!” cried Eva, as if in pa.s.sionate remonstrance with the unseen father; ”I was weak from sickness; thou and the priest did persuade me. It all sounded so peaceful, so beautiful, so holy. But I have tried it; and it is not peace, it is not joy. The Church is composed of all holy men and women, and we who are baptised into it become its members, knit into its life. I ask no more. Are these nuns better than other women? No--I say NO! I have watched. I have listened. I have felt. It is not a holy life; it is no holier than what we see led by the saints in the world outside cloister walls. There are saintly nuns, I deny it not; as there are saintly wives and mothers, and saintly maidens and virgins without the cloister wall. It is not the dress, the vow, the life, that makes the saint. It is something far, far higher. And the Spirit divides His gifts as He will. He is not bound by gates and bars and high imprisoning walls!”
Again the pa.s.sionate sobs broke forth; and there was a sound as of anger and fierce resolve in that weeping, rather than of mere helpless despair. Eva suddenly sat up, a bright light s.h.i.+ning in her eyes, her mouth taking an expression of almost grim determination.
”They cannot force me to ratify my vows at the close of my novitiate!
What would happen if I refused? What are the tales that are whispered within these walls of nuns who have been found unfaithful--as they are pleased to term it?”
The girl was silent. There was a tense look upon her face. She was pondering deeply. In her dark eyes there showed from time to time a gleam as of fire. It was plain that within the spirit of this novice of the convent there dwelt a daring and a courage that is not vouchsafed to all.
And whence had come to Eva and to some other of her sister nuns this sudden disgust of convent life?--this sudden conviction that it was not in accordance with the dictates of nature, nor with the scheme of salvation as set down in Holy Writ? How came that convent-bred girl to have glimmerings of a higher calling as a member of the Church, than as just a so-called cloister bride, brought, as it was then believed, in some way nearer perfection by having abandoned the place in the world in which she had been set.
That question is easily answered. Not very long before there had broken from the bonds of monastic life a young monk, Martin Luther by name, who had since then been taking the world by storm, preaching and teaching doctrines of liberty and enlightenment which had made the ears of his listeners tingle. This bold young teacher was related to some friends of two sisters, nuns in the Convent at Nimptsch, where Eva was undergoing her training, and in some way or other many of his writings had been introduced and circulated within the convent walls, with the effect that nine of its inmates, including the young Eva, had become so keenly dissatisfied with the life of seclusion to which they were vowed, that they were making every effort in their power to gain permission to rejoin their own families, and to be taken home by their parents.
But however much men's minds might be working with a sense of impending change--a suspicion that the things in which they had hitherto put their trust were about to fail them, and crumble into dust;--in spite of all the upheaval that was beginning in the Church and in the world, men's minds were not yet prepared for the revolt of nuns from their cloistered homes. The breaking of the solemn vows they had taken still seemed a thing impossible to condone or to permit. Not one of the fathers appealed to had consented to the earnest pet.i.tion addressed to him. Not one had admitted the arguments by which the cloistered captives had sought to win upon the hearts of those in authority over them. Eva's heart had sunk within her these past days, as the stern replies came back; but she had ever buoyed herself up with the hope that in her case mercy would be shown. She was so young. Her full vows had not been taken. She had pleaded so earnestly. It seemed impossible that her father should not be moved to compa.s.sion. And yet his answer was now in her hands, and it was a stern, uncompromising refusal to consider her pet.i.tion for a moment.
”It was just a temptation of the devil,” he concluded.
A step was heard in the corridor without, and Eva quickly resumed her discarded headgear. Order and discipline were strong elements in her present life. What would the Reverend Mother or one of the senior sisters think, if they found her in such dishevelment? But the door had barely opened before she uttered a little cry of joyous relief.
”Oh, Katharine! is it indeed thou?”
It was one of the marks of those who longed to renounce the convent rule, that they had discarded, amongst themselves, their convent names.
Katharine von Bora[A] was known as Sister Therese, as Eva was known as Sister Angela to their sister--nuns; but with the longing after home ties had come the longing after home t.i.tles. It gave Eva a thrill of joy each time she heard her once familiar name pa.s.s the lips of those about her.
[Footnote A: Afterwards the wife of Martin Luther.]
”My little one, I saw by thy face in the chapel just now, that thou art in trouble. Is it that thou hast had thine answer too?”
Eva held out the crumpled sheet, and the elder nun's eyes quickly ran over the written words. She sighed as she read.
”It is no more than I feared; although so much less than I hoped. The walls and bars of the convent are strong indeed.”
”Katharine--ah, sweet Katharine!--do not tell me that thou hast yielded up hope! I would dare so much! I would do so much! If a monk has escaped--like that brave Martin Luther--and nought is done to him, why may not we?”
The elder woman looked searchingly into the eager, quivering face, and caught the light of courage and purpose in the soft, dark eyes. Her own kindled beneath the glance.
”Little one, art thou brave enough, and discreet enough to be entrusted with a secret?” asked Katharine, ”or wouldst thou rather remain in ignorance until the final moment? There is safety sometimes in ignorance; and thou art little more than a child.”
The colour was coming and going in Eva's face; the look of purpose in her eyes deepened each moment.
”Tell me,” she whispered, her eyes beginning to s.h.i.+ne, ”is it that there is hope for us? Can it be that help can reach us, even within these grim, strong walls?”
Katharine glanced round her to be certain that the door of the cell was fast shut. She even moved to it, and looked down the bare corridor, as if to a.s.sure herself that there was no spy within hearing. Who could tell, in such a community as that, whether it would not seem the bounden duty of any pa.s.sing nun to play the eavesdropper, should she harbour for a moment a suspicion that all was not well with her fellow sisters? Who could tell whether or not the Reverend Mother had got wind of the discontent of some of her nuns? Probably she knew somewhat about it, since the appeal of certain of their number to their friends had been made. Might she not have set traps and devices in order to discover whether or not the answers they had received would be sufficient to quiet their discontent, and induce them to settle contentedly in their cloistered home? Would she not be intensely alert to discover if any other phase of revolt were pa.s.sing in the minds of the imprisoned nuns?